Marbled Oobleck Sensory Art Activity

Make some beautiful marbled patterns in goop and lift off prints to make gorgeous, patterned art work with kids! A lovely sensory rich art investigation for all ages to enjoy. We investigated with adding colouring to Oobleck to see what would happen as the mixture changed from solid to liquid and back again. The results were beautiful and pieces of art in their own right, and absolutely mesmerising to watch as the colours changed and developed all by themselves, almost dancing through the mixture!

To make the Oobleck (otherwise known as goop) the girls actually experimented with quantities all by themselves, as part of the investigative learning experience! But the rough recipe is very simple. Add 2 cups of cornflour and 1 cup of water and mix. I think they must have added around 4 cups of cornflour and 2 cups of water as we had a LOT by the end!

They were fascinated by the amazingly strange texture and consistency of the substance, which goes from liquid to solid and back again. If you have never tried making this you really must as you will love it as much as your children! It is a great discussion starter and a way for prompting insightful questions, that can be looked up and answered together.

I bravely handed the girls our liquid food colourings and let them add them as they pleased. The oobleck took the colour in as fascinating a way as would be expected, in that it quickly spread and made beautiful patterns like a liquid, then stopped as though frozen in ice! When they put in hands or stirrers to mix, they could very slowly and meaningfully pull the colour to create shapes. An older child or adult could make a beautiful, intentional piece of art this way. Let me know if you try it, I’d LOVE to see the result!

Pop had the great idea to scoop the oobleck straight onto the table, after all, it wouldn’t drip off in a hurry! They added lots of different colours and watched them swirl then stop.
Beautiful rivers of blue in a purple sea! Wonderful marbelised patterns began to form and could then be rearranged and started over again.

I stumbled across your page via kidsactivitiesblog.com and I’m so glad I did. What a wonderful idea. I have a soon to be 3 year old next month and his rate of learning blows me away… I feel like I can’t keep up… but finding these pages really gives me hope that we’ve got a lot of fun learning ahead of us. Thanks for some great tips. We’re going to make oobleck tomorrow and I can’t wait to seek out more exciting ideas from your page. Cheers ~Angie